$ Methodology/FAQs/Definitions: The foundation behind these player values is our Point Share methodology. WTF is a Point Share you ask? It represents the estimated difference in an average team’s points if they were to substitute a given player for the average drafted player at his position (same in concept as Alex Patton’s Standings Gain Points). So if a player has a 1.0 for Runs, he would, on average, increase a team’s standing points in Runs by 1 point. Thus, a completely average player is worth zero Point Shares. These Point Shares are converted to dollars at the total player level as well as for each category. The sum of a player’s category $ plus $1 (for replacement level) equals their total auction $ value. Converting Point Shares into $ is covered in the FAQs that I had put together as part of the Historical Player Rater.

Filtering Results: You can filter multiple fields at the same time. The text fields below the column headers enable several methods for filtering the data. Here are some examples:

Function

Symbol

Example

Explanation

ANY MATCH

‘B’ in Pos

Typing B in Pos will filter to any player with 1B, 2B, or 3B eligibility. Type in more details to filter further – e.g., “1B’, “1B, 3B”, etc.

OR

|

Ruth|Aaron in ‘Name’

All players with Ruth or Aaron in their name

NOT

!

!FM in ‘Halls’

All players who are not in both the Hall of Fame and the Hall of Merit

NOR

! |

!F|M in ‘Halls’

All players who are not in the Hall of Fame NOR the Hall of Merit. Just use the ! once.

GREATER THAN

>

>30 in $

All players whose $ is greater than 30

LESS THAN

<

<30 in $

All players whose $ is less than 30

GREATER THAN OR EQUAL TO

>=

>=30 in $

All players whose $ is greater than or equal to 30

LESS THAN OR EQUAL TO

<=

<=30 in $

All players whose $ is less than or equal to 30

Roster: For ‘ESPN Roster’, this is C/1B/2B/SS/3B/5 OF/CI/MI/UTIL/9P. For ‘Yahoo Roster’, this is C/1B/2B/SS/3B/3 OF/2 UTIL/2 SP/2 RP/4 P. For AL/NL-only leagues, this is 2C/1B/2B/SS/3B/5 OF/CI/MI/UTIL/9P.

Pos / MVPos: ‘Pos’ includes every position the player is eligible. ‘MVPos’ is the position that was used for their Point Share rankings and is the position where the player is judged most valuable. The order of most valuable to least valuable for positions is: C, SS, 2B, 3B, OF, 1B, DH. Note that the position eligibility rules for ESPN and AL/NL only formats is 20 games previous season / 10 games current season while Yahoo format is 10 games previous season / 5 games current season.

Steamer Projections – Created in 2008 and maintained and operated by Jared Cross, Dash Davidson, and Peter Rosenbloom. One of the top (if not the top) performing projection systems based on our 2012 baseball projections test. Playing time estimates as well as Saves, Holds, and Quality Starts are provided by Rudy Gamble of Razzball.

@Joe: these are updated daily. the top players $ values don’t necessarily go up because the replacements players are worse so bigger penalty for stars/scrubs approach. it’s the middle-tier that will see increases vs mixed leagues. a lot of this comes down to strategy lik ewhat hit/pitch split you want (i use 67/33 which is about the midpoint). my stated preference (which you can adjust from) is: 67/33, no position adjustments except minor one to ensure the nth C is at least $1 (n=# of teams). If you want to change to 70/30, multiply each hitter by 70/67 and every pitcher by 27/30. If you want to adjust catchers by $5, add $5 to them and remove the appropriate amount from the other hitters.